Late Wednesday afternoon, reports broke that Mary-Kate Olsen and Olivier Sarkozy are getting divorced. This was both a rare bit of personal news about Olsen—much as fascination with her and her twin, Ashley, endures, it usually manifests as speculation—and seismic. Since then, Olsen’s rep has declined to comment, but some details are surfacing in the tabloids.

Us Weeklyreported that Olsen’s “business interests and fortune are protected” due to an “ironclad prenup,” according to an anonymous source. Page Six took a spin through the summons and complaint filed in New York’s Supreme Court on April 17. According to the tabloid, Olsen’s court papers said at the time, “it was clear my marriage was over…the relationship has broken down irretrievably.”

Olsen was reportedly notified that the court’s weren’t accepting divorce filings during the coronavirus crisis and is now asking for an emergency petition because Sarkozy “has terminated the lease on our New York City residence…without my consent.” In a May 3 email attached to the filing, Sarkozy allegedly said of their Gramercy apartment, “I am not in a position to extend it and/or pay additional rent.” Olsen said in the filing that she can’t look for another apartment during the pandemic or retrieve her belongings from the couple’s various properties and is “gravely concerned” that Sarkozy will get rid of both the belongings and properties. The papers, dated May 13, were signed in East Hampton, and Olsen is asking for continued use of the Gramercy apartment, as well as a Bridgehampton home and an additional Midtown apartment.

Between Mary-Kate’s divorce and a paparazzi photo of Ashley walking around New York in what appeared to be a leather mask, it’s the most we’ve seen or heard from the twins since the video they made in December for Ashley Benson. Benson, whose relationship with Cara Delevingne recently ended, is in a tabloid cycle of her own after allegedly being spotted with G-Eazy over the weekend. And so there’s plenty of Olsen-adjacent intrigue around, though none of it quite as detailed as the real estate accounting.